El Dorado News-Times

Sub tourist calls himself ‘naive’ for ’21 Titanic dive

- FRANK JORDANS

BERLIN (AP) — As an internatio­nal search determined the implosion of a vessel setting out for the underwater wreckage of the Titanic, a man who was one of the submersibl­e company’s first customers characteri­zed a dive he made to the site two years ago as a suicide mission.

“You have to be a little bit crazy to do this sort of thing,” said Arthur Loibl, a 61-year-old retired businessma­n and adventurer from Germany.

Loibl told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he first had the idea of seeing the Titanic wreckage while on a trip to the South Pole in 2016. At the time, a Russian company was offering dives for half a million dollars.

After Washington state-based OceanGate announced its own operation a year later, he jumped at the chance, paying $110,000 for a dive in 2019 that fell through when the first submersibl­e didn’t survive testing.

Two years later he went on a voyage that was successful, along with OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, French diver and Titanic expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet and two men from England.

“Imagine a metal tube a few meters long with a sheet of metal for a floor. You can’t stand. You can’t kneel. Everyone is sitting close to or on top of each other,” Loibl said. “You can’t be claustroph­obic.”

During the 2.5-hour descent and ascent, the lights were turned off to conserve energy, he said, with the only illuminati­on coming from a fluorescen­t glow stick.

The dive was repeatedly delayed to fix a problem with the battery and the balancing weights. In total, the voyage took 10.5 hours.

The group was lucky and enjoyed an amazing view of the wreck, Loibl said, unlike visitors on other dives who only got to see a field of debris or in some cases nothing at all. Some customers lost nonrefunda­ble payments after bad weather made descent impossible.

He described Rush as a tinkerer who tried to make do with what was available to carry out the dives, but in hindsight, he said, “it was a bit dubious.”

“I was a bit naive, looking back now,” Loibl said, likening it to a suicide mission.

The OceanGate submersibl­e carrying Rush, Nargeolet, a British adventurer and two members of a Pakistani business family disappeare­d Sunday after setting out for the wreckage of the famed ship, which struck an iceberg and sank in 1912, killing all but about 700 of the roughly 2,200 passengers and crew.

Newly uncovered allegation­s suggest that significan­t safety warnings were made during developmen­t of the submersibl­e, dubbed the Titan.

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